thanks for your help, I finally got it working, but not the way I had
originally intended. I'll admit, there were some bone-head things on my
part, but hopefully people can learn from me.
So, I gave up on ghosting. It would have been nice if I found a way to
work. I hate having to reinstall ALL my programs again! if anyone has found
success using norton ghost 12.0 let me know.
So I just reformatted the hard drive, and installed vista onto the new hard
drive. Remember, at this point my old hard drive is committed to C, my data
drive is at d, and my new hard drive (soon to be primary hard drive) is at e.
So I swap out my old failing hard drive, and put in my new hard drive..
Guess what. the thing says bootmgr not detected!! I think Darrell Gorter
said to use the windows DVD and use the repair fxn. And I did before,
without any results. However, (and here's the bonehead thing on my part).
It says when its performing a repair, that it may have to restart and repair
more than once.
On the previous tries, I had only given the repair fxn one try before I
moved on. Okay, so I let the windows dvd repair my new hard drive two
times... take out my dvd.... reboot... and Voila. It boots correctly,
albeit without any of my programs, but thats better than a crashed hard drive!
So, i'm done right... not exactly. So, my windows drive is still set to E.
Doh! actually, i could have just left this alone, as it appeared that
everything was working fine.
However, I wanted to try the other tip... that is going into the registry
and deleting the mounted devices section. So, I did that, and rebooted.....
Okay it boots.... black screen with scrolling bar at the bottom.... welcome
screen..... preparing your desktop screen (uh oh).... and then blank blue
screen with with just the mouse cursor (i start swearing!, i could have left
it alone, but i just had to meddle).
Well, i can still access the task manager through the blue screen
(ctr+alt+del), and I run command. I see that at least vista has reset my
hard drive to C:!!! So, now I reinstalled vista over this drive, and voila,
I have my new hard drive.
I had to go through the pains of reactivating the software and reinstalling
my programs, but I did it!
So, here's what worked for me.
If vista says your hard drive is failing and you need to switch hard drives,
then here are my steps to success. I was lucky because my notebook had two
hard drive slots.
1. Your old hard drive should already be in slot 1. Place your new hard
drive in slot 2. ( I had to take out my data hard drive for this step).
2. install windows into the new hard drive. (I would have liked to do it
via USB, but vista does not allow you to do this)
3. take out the old hard drive and put the new hard drive in slot 1.
4. make the registry changes as noted above (go into HKLM via regedit and
delete dosdevices
5. reinstall windows onto the same drive.
6. reactivate, you will probably have to call vista to ask for a new key
7. reinstall your programs.
I'm sure there is an easier way. Like I said,earlier I had hoped to use
ghost so I wouldn't have had to deal with these issues. There probably is an
easier way within windows. Hopefully, this feedback will help future users,
and hopefully microsoft will develop a more straightforward way of upgrading
hard drives as hard drive failures on notebooks are way too common. (i've had
two in the past year!)
Thanks again for the help, it was educational, and at least I learned
something in the process.